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Topic: Egg Laying VERY SLOW (Read 3233 times)

We have experienced a dramatic decline in our chicken's egg laying. Nothing has been changed in the way they are fed, watered, lighted, or anything else. They are not old. And we have four that hatched this Spring that are still not laying at all, and should be by now.

I have heard quite a few others say the same.

Does anyone here have a similar experience, or a different one for that matter.

it's the time of the year. 1st year hens will lay some through winter. older hens may stop laying. as the days get longer, the laying will pick up.

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We have about 27 1st year laying hens. Our egg count now a days is around 17 or 18. They are still molting. We were getting 25 to 27 a day. Then our chickens started head butting passing cars so the laying population declined some.

I've heard folks say that you can run a light in the coup. Something about it giving that extra light makes the egg laying pick up.

Hi Itsme , We run a light in the coop this time of year , and we increase the amount of layer mash from the feed store from about 25% to 50% of their ration . We also feed them some chopped clover hay (dried lawnmower clippings) . This helps , but we have never had them equal their laying rate that we enjoy in the summertime . We are near 24 hour daylight days in late June / early July . Maybe that stimulates production ? Burl

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Of all the things I've ever been called ;I do like "Dad" the most . ---Burl---

I havent seen one egg from my 18 hens in a whole week. Before that, it was a frozen egg once in a great while. I prefer to let my hens rest from laying in winter as nature intends... but I know you can increase production with warmth and artificial light. Do your hens have access to crushed oyster shell?

Yes, our chickens have free access to oyster shells, most of the calcium they eat comes from either bugs and such or from the crushed egg shells we feed back to them, also free choice.

We do give them artificial light and I have a heat lamp hanging next to the waterer to keep it from freezing all the time. So the inside of the coop stays a little warmer than outside when it's really cold weather.

There may be something we could do differently with the feed that would help. I'll have to think about that. We custom mix our own organic whole grains so this would be another research project for me.

I like the idea of some greens. I know they are short on those right now. Though they do have access to our garden which has discarded hay from the goat shed and some green peas in their ration.

What still seems to be a puzzle for me is that the feed they are getting is the same as before and our chickens NEVER have molted and have always given us an abundance of eggs, even in the winter, until this year.....

Hi again Bill , Is it possible your hens are having problems with lice ? We dust our hens every month with cold wood ashes and give them a box of the stuff to dust bath in . When we've had problems with lice before it sure had a negative effect on egg production , and the hens sure did look scraggily . Just an idea to check out . Burl

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Of all the things I've ever been called ;I do like "Dad" the most . ---Burl---

do you have your artificial light on 24/7. If you do I personally think it burns the hens out. They dont get the rest they need. I use a timer and give them about 16 hours aday. I rotate my hen's out after there second year. I feed layer mash and ALL kitchen scrapes except fish.

Hi Danno,No we don't leave the lights on all the time. We use a timer such that they have about 14 hours of light.

When we first got baby chicks several years ago we had them under a white heat lamp. When we changed the lamp out for a red one the chicks just collapsed from exhaustion. It's funny to think about that now, but we didn't know any better. The red lamp allowed them to sleep whereas the white one somehow kept them awake besides keeping them warm.

Thanks for the thought though. You're right. That would wear them out.